Virginia

History

Distinctively fluted stone points found at Flint Run in Front Royal and at
the Williamson Site in Dinwiddie County testify to the presence in what is
now the Commonwealth of Virginia of nomadic Paleo-Indians after 8000 BC.
Climatic changes and the arrival of other Indian groups about 3500 BC
produced the Archaic Culture, which lasted until about AD 500. These
Indians apparently were great eaters of oysters, and shell accumulations
along riverbanks mark their settlement sites. The Woodland Period (AD
500–1600) marked the Indians' development of the bow and
arrow and sophisticated pottery. At the time of English contact, early in
the 17th century, Tidewater Virginia was occupied principally by
Algonkian-speakers, planters as well as hunters and fishers, who lived in
pole-framed dwellings forming small, palisaded towns. The piedmont area
was the home of the Manahoac, Monacan, and Tutelo, all of Siouan stock.
Cherokee lived in Virginia's far southwestern triangle.

The first permanent English settlement in America was established at
Jamestown on 13 May 1607 in the new land named Virginia in honor of
Elizabeth I, the "Virgin Queen." The successful settlement
was sponsored by the London Company (also known as the Virginia Company),
a joint-stock venture chartered by King James I in 1606. The charter
defined Virginia as all of the North American coast between 30° and
45°N and extending inland for 50 mi (80 km). A new royal charter in
1609 placed Virginia's northern and southern boundaries at points
200 mi (320 km) north and south of Point Comfort, at the mouth of the
James River, and extended its territory westward to the Pacific; a third
charter issued in 1612 pushed Virginia eastward to embrace the Bermuda
Islands. Thus, Virginia at one time stretched from southern Maine to
California and encompassed all or part of 42 of the present 50 states, as
well as Bermuda and part of the Canadian province of Ontario.

Upon landing at Jamestown, the 100 or more male colonists elected from
among 12 royally approved councillors a governor and captain general,
Edward Maria Wingfield. Much internal strife, conflict with the Indians,
and a "starving time" that reduced the settlers to eating
their horses caused them to vote to leave the colony in 1610, but just as
they were leaving, three supply ships arrived; with them came Thomas West,
Baron De La Warr (Lord Delaware), who stayed to govern the Virginia Colony
until 1611. Finally, however, it was the energy, resourcefulness, and
military skill of Captain John Smith that saved the colony from both
starvation and destruction by the Indians. He also charted the coast and
wrote the first American book,
A True Relation,
which effectively publicized English colonization of the New World.

Smith's chief Algonkian adversary was Powhatan, emperor of a
confederacy in eastern Virginia that bore his name. Although Smith was
taken prisoner by Powhatan, he was able to work out a tenuous peace later
cemented by the marriage in 1614 of the emperor's favorite
daughter, Pocahontas, to John Rolfe, a Jamestown settler who founded the
colonial tobacco industry.

Three events marked 1619 as a red-letter year in Virginia history. First,
women were sent to the colony in large numbers. Any man marrying one of a
shipment of 90 "young maids" had to pay 120 lb of tobacco
for the cost of her transportation. The women were carefully screened for
respectability, and none had to marry if she did not find a man to her
liking. The second key event was the arrival in Jamestown of the first
blacks, probably as indentured servants, a condition from which slavery in
the colony evolved (the first legally recognized slaveholder, in the
1630s, was Anthony Johnson, himself black). The third and most celebrated
event of 1619 was the convening in Jamestown of the first representative
assembly in the New World, consisting of a council chosen by the London
Company and a house of burgesses elected by the colonists. Thus,
self-government through locally elected representatives became a reality
in America and an important precedent for the English colonies.

King James I, for whom the colonial capital was named, was at first
content with colonization under the London Company's direction. But
in 1624, he charged the company with mismanagement and revoked its
charter. Virginia remained a royal colony until 1776, although royal
governors such as Sir Francis Wyatt and Sir George Yeardley continued to
convoke the general assembly without the Crown's assent. A serious
challenge to self-government came in 1629–35 with Governor John
Harvey's "executive offenses"—including the
knocking out of a councillor's teeth and the detaining of a
petition of protest to the king—which sparked a rebellion led by
Dr. John Pott. Harvey was bloodlessly deposed by the council, which
turned, significantly, to the house of burgesses for confirmation of the
action the council had taken.

Despite serious setbacks because of Indian massacres in 1622 and 1644, the
colony's population expanded rapidly along the James, York,
Rappahannock, and Potomac rivers, and along the Eastern Shore. In 1653,
the general assembly attempted to collect taxes from the Eastern Shore
although that area had no legislative representation. At a mass meeting,
Colonel Thomas Johnson urged resistance to taxation without
representation. The resulting Northampton Declaration embodied this
principle, which would provide the rallying cry for the American
Revolution; the immediate result was the granting of representation to the
Eastern Shore.

Virginia earned the designation Old Dominion through its loyalty to the
Stuarts during England's Civil War, but the superior military and
naval forces of Oliver Cromwell compelled submission to parliamentary
commissioners in 1652. In the eight years that followed, the house of
burgesses played an increasingly prominent role. Colonial governors, while
at least nominally Puritan, usually conducted affairs with an easy
tolerance that did not mar Virginia's general hospitality to
refugee Cavaliers from the mother country.

With the restoration of the royal family in 1660, Sir William Berkeley, an
ardent royalist who had served as governor before the colony's
surrender to the Commonwealth, was returned to that office. In his first
administration, his benign policies and appealing personality had earned
him great popularity, but during his second term, his dictatorial and
vindictive support of royal prerogatives made him the most hated man in
the colony. When he seemed unable to defend the people against Indian
incursions in 1676, they sought a general of their own. They found him in
young Nathaniel Bacon, a charismatic planter of great daring and
eloquence, whose leadership attracted many small planters impatient by
this time with the privileged oligarchy directing the colony.
Bacon's war against the Indians became a populist-style revolt
against the governor, who fled to the Eastern Shore, and reform
legislation was pushed by the burgesses. Berkeley regained control of the
capital briefly, only to be defeated by Bacon's forces; but
Jamestown was burned by the retreating Bacon, who died of fever shortly
afterward. Berkeley's subsequent return to power was marked by so
many hangings of offenders that the governor was summoned to the court of
Charles II to answer for his actions. Bacon's Rebellion was cited
as a precedent when the colonies waged war against George III a century
later.

The 17th century closed on a note of material and cultural progress with
the gubernatorial administration of Francis Nicholson. The College of
William and Mary, the second institution of higher learning in America,
was chartered in 1693, and Middle Plantation (renamed Williamsburg in
1722), the site of the college, became the seat of government when the
capital was moved from Jamestown in 1699. The new capital remained small,
although it was crowded when the legislature was in session. A new era of
cultural and economic progress dawned with the administration of Alexander
Spotswood (1710–22), sometimes considered the greatest of
Virginia's colonial governors. He discouraged the colony's
excessively heavy dependence on a single crop, tobacco; promoted industry,
especially ironwork; took a humane interest in blacks and Indians'
strengthened fortification; ended the depredations of the notorious pirate
Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard; and, by leading his
"Knights of the Golden Horseshoe" across the Blue Ridge,
dramatized the opening of the transmontane region.

In the decades that followed, eastern Virginians moving into the Valley of
Virginia were joined by Scotch-Irish and Germans moving southward from
Maryland and Pennsylvania. Virginians caught up in western settlement lost
much of their awe of the mother country during the French and Indian War
(1756–63). A young Virginia militiaman, Colonel George Washington,
gave wise but unheeded advice to Britain's Major General Edward
Braddock before the Battle of Monongahela, and afterward emerged as the
hero of that action.

Virginia, acting independently and with other colonies, repeatedly
challenged agents of the Crown. In 1765, the House of Burgesses, swept by
the eloquence of Patrick Henry, adopted five resolutions opposing the
Stamp Act, through which the English Parliament had sought to tax the
colonists for their own defense. In 1768, Virginia joined Massachusetts in
issuing an appeal to all the colonies for concerted action. The following
year, Virginia initiated a boycott of British goods in answer to the
taxation provisions of the hated Townshend Acts. In 1773, the Old Dominion
became the first colony to establish an intercolonial Committee of
Correspondence. And it joined the other colonies at the First Continental
Congress, which met in Philadelphia in 1774 and elected Virginia's
Peyton Randolph president.

Virginia was the first colony to instruct its delegates to move for
independence at the Continental Congress of 1776. The congressional
resolution was introduced by one native son, Richard Henry Lee, and the
Declaration of Independence was written by another, Thomas Jefferson. In
the same year, Virginians proclaimed their government a commonwealth and
adopted a constitution and declaration of rights, prepared by George
Mason. The declaration became the basis for the Bill of Rights in the US
Constitution. Virginians were equally active in the Revolutionary War.
George Washington was commander in chief of the Continental Army, and
other outstanding Virginia officers were George Rogers Clark, Hugh Mercer,
Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee, William Campbell, Isaac
Shelby, and an adopted son, Daniel Morgan. In addition, the greatest
American naval hero was a Scottish-born Virginian, John Paul Jones.
Virginia itself was a major battlefield, and it was on Virginia soil, at
Yorktown on 19 October 1781, that British General Charles Cornwallis
surrendered to Washington, effectively ending the war.

During the early federal period, Virginia's leadership was as
notable as it had been during the American Revolution. James Madison is
honored as the "father of the Constitution," and Washington,
who was president of the constitutional convention, became the first US
president in 1789. Indeed, Virginians occupied the presidency for all but
four of the nation's first 28 years. Far more influential than most
presidents was another Virginian, John Marshall, who served as US chief
justice for 34 years, beginning in 1801.

During the first half of the 19th century, Virginians became increasingly
concerned with the problem of slavery. From the early 1700s, the general
assembly had repeatedly prohibited the importation of slaves, only to be
overruled by the Crown, protecting the interests of British slave traders.
In 1778, no longer subject to royal veto, the legislature provided that
any slave brought into the state would automatically be freed upon
arrival. (There was no immediate legal termination of the bondage of those
already enslaved, or of their offspring.) The number of free blacks grew
tenfold by 1810, and though some became self-supporting farmers and
artisans, many could find no employment. Fearing that unhappy free blacks
might incite those who were still slaves to rebellion, the general
assembly in 1806 decreed that each slave emancipated in due course must
then leave Virginia within a year or after reaching the age of 21. Nat
Turner's slave revolt—which took the lives of at least 55
white men, women, and children in Southampton County in
1831—increased white fears of black emancipation. Nevertheless,
legislation to end slavery in Virginia failed adoption by only seven votes
the following year.

The slavery controversy did not consume all Virginians' energies in
the first half of the 19th century, an era that saw the state become a
leading center of scientific, artistic, and educational advancement. But
this era ended with the coming of the Civil War, a conflict about which
many Virginians had grave misgivings. Governor John Letcher was a Union
man, and most of the state's top political leaders hoped to retain
the federal tie. Even after the formation at Montgomery, Alabama, of the
Confederate States of America, Virginia initiated a national peace
convention in Washington, DC, headed by a native son and former US
president, John Tyler. A statewide convention, assembled in Richmond in
April 1861, adopted an ordinance of secession only after President Abraham
Lincoln sought to send troops across Virginia to punish the states that
had already seceded and called upon the commonwealth to furnish soldiers
for that task. Virginia adopted secession with some regret and
apprehension but with no agonizing over constitutional principles, for in
ratifying the Constitution the state had reserved the right to secede.
Shortly afterward, Richmond, the capital of Virginia since 1780, became
the capital of the Confederacy. It was also the home of the Tredegar
Ironworks, the South's most important manufacturer of heavy
weaponry.

Robert E. Lee, offered field command of the Union armies, instead resigned
his US commission in order to serve his native state as commander of the
Army of Northern Virginia and eventually as chief of the Confederate
armies. Other outstanding Virginian generals included Thomas Jonathan
"Stonewall" Jackson, J. E. B. "Jeb" Stuart,
Joseph E. Johnston, and A. P. Hill. Besides furnishing a greater number of
outstanding Confederate generals than any other state, the Old Dominion
supplied some of the Union's military leaders, George H. Thomas,
the "Rock of Chickamauga," among them. More than 30
Virginians held the rank of brigadier general or major general in the
federal forces.

Virginia became the principal battlefield of the Civil War, the scene of
brilliant victories won by General Lee's army at Bull Run (about 30
mi/48 km southwest of Washington, DC), Fredericksburg, and
Chancellorsville (Spotsylvania County). But the overwhelming numbers and
industrial and naval might of the Union compelled Lee's surrender
at Appomattox on 9 April 1865. Virginia waters were the scene of one of
the most celebrated naval engagements in world history, the first battle
of the ironclads, when the USS Monitor and CSS Virginia (Merrimac),
rebuilt in the Portsmouth Shipyard, met at Hampton Roads. The war cost
Virginia one-third of its territory when West Virginia was admitted to the
Union as a separate state on 20 June 1863. Richmond was left in ruins, and
agriculture and industry throughout the commonwealth were destroyed. Union
General Philip H. Sheridan's systematic campaign of demolition in
the Shenandoah Valley almost made good his boast that a crow flying over
the valley would have to carry its own rations.

In 1867, Virginia was placed under US military rule. A constitutional
convention held in Richmond under the leadership of carpetbaggers and
scalawags drafted a constitution that disqualified the overwhelming
majority of white Virginians from holding office and deprived about 95% of
them of the right to vote. In this crisis, a compromise was negotiated
under which white Virginians would accept Negro suffrage if they
themselves were permitted to vote and hold office. The amended
constitution, providing for universal manhood suffrage, was adopted in
1869, and Virginia was readmitted to the Union on 26 January 1870.

Although the bankrupt state was saddled with a debt of more than $45
million, the Conservative Democrats undertook repayment of the entire
debt, including approximately one-third estimated to be West
Virginia's share. Other Democrats, who came to be known as
Readjusters, argued that the commonwealth could not provide education and
other essential services to its citizens unless it disclaimed one-third of
the debt and reached a compromise with creditors concerning the remainder.
William Mahone, a railroad president and former Confederate major general,
engineered victory for the Readjusters in 1880 with the aid of the
Republicans. His election to the US Senate that year represented another
success for the Readjuster-Republican coalition, which was attentive to
the needs of both blacks and underprivileged whites.

Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, life in public places in Virginia
continued in an unsegregated fashion that sometimes amazed visitors from
northern cities. As the 19th century neared an end, however, Virginia
moved toward legal separation of the races. In 1900, the general assembly
by a one-vote majority enacted segregation on railroad cars. The rule
became applicable the following year to streetcars and steamboats. In
1902, the Virginia constitutional convention enacted a literacy test and
poll tax that effectively reduced the black vote to negligible size.

Two decades later, just when the Old Dominion seemed permanently set in
the grooves of conservatism, two liberals, each with impeccable old-line
backgrounds, found themselves battling for the governorship in a
Democratic primary campaign that changed the course of Virginia's
political history. Harry F. Byrd defeated G. Walter Mapp in the election
of 1925 and immediately after taking office launched the state on an era
of reform. In a whirlwind 60 days, the general assembly revised the tax
system, revised balloting procedures, and adopted measures to lure
industry to Virginia. The Anti-Lynch Act of 1927 made anyone present at
the scene of a lynching who did not intervene guilty of murder; there has
not been a lynching in Virginia since its passage. Byrd also reorganized
the state government, consolidating nearly 100 agencies into 14
departments. Later, as US senator, Byrd became so renowned as a
conservative that many people forgot his earlier career as a fighting
liberal.

Following the depression of the 1930s, Virginia became one of the most
prosperous states of the Southeast. It profited partly from national
defense contracts and military and naval expansion, but also from
increased manufacturing and from what became one of the nation's
leading tourist industries. Few states made so great a contribution as
Virginia to the US effort in World War II. More than 300,000 Virginians
served in the armed forces; 9,000 lost their lives, and 10 were awarded
the Medal of Honor. Virginians were proud of the fact that General George
C. Marshall was a Virginia resident and a graduate of Virginia Military
Institute, and even delighted in the knowledge that both General Dwight D.
Eisenhower, commander in the European theater, and General Douglas
MacArthur, commander in the Pacific, were sons of Virginia mothers.

The postwar period brought many changes in the commonwealth's
public life. During the first administration of Governor Mills E. Godwin,
Jr. (1966–70), the state abandoned its strict pay-as-you-go fiscal
policy, secured an $81-million bond issue, and enacted a sales tax. Much
of the increased revenue benefited the public school system; funding for
the four-year colleges was greatly expanded, and a system of low-tuition
community colleges was instituted.

In 1970, A. Linwood Holton, Jr., became the first Republican governor of
Virginia since 1874. Pledging to "make today's Virginia a
model in race relations," Holton increased black representation on
state boards and in the higher echelons of government. He reversed the
policies of his immediate predecessors, who had generally met the US
Supreme Court's desegregation ruling in 1954 with a program of
massive resistance, eschewing violence but adopting every legal expedient
to frustrate integration. By the mid-1970s, public school integration in
Virginia had been achieved to a degree not yet accomplished in many
northern states.

The northeast and Virginia Beach/Norfolk area of Virginia boomed in the
early 1980s, spurred by an expansion of federal jobs and a national
military build-up. The population in Virginia Beach grew by 50% between
1980 and 1990. Non-agricultural employment rose by 29% between 1980 and
1988. The economies of rural parts of the state to the west and south,
however, remained stagnant.

In the late 1980s, Virginia was hit by a recession. Douglas Wilder, the
nation's first black governor and a moderate Democrat, responded to
a significant shortfall in state revenues by refusing to raise taxes and
by insisting on maintaining a $200 million reserve fund. Instead, Wilder
reduced the budgets and staff of state services and of the state's
college and university system. Wilder's cuts created particular
hardship for the less affluent counties that relied heavily on state aid
for their funding of schools, libraries, and road maintenance. Wilder,
limited by law to one term in office, was succeeded in 1993 by
conservative Republican Richard Allen. In 1994, nationwide attention was
focused on the US Senate race in which the Democratic incumbent, Charles
S. Robb, defeated Republican challenger Oliver North, known for his role
in the Iran-contra affair of the 1980s.

In the mid-1990s Virginia's economy was strong, thanks to its
diversified base of agriculture, manufacturing, and service industries
(the latter dominated by federal government employment). Pollution from
industry and agricultural chemicals remained a significant concern, and
the state was investing in cleanup efforts in the Chesapeake Bay.

In 1994, the Walt Disney Company abandoned its much-publicized plan to
build a history theme park, "Disney's America," in
Virginia, following strong opposition from residents, environmentalists,
and historians.

Virginia was in the midst of its worst state revenue performance in 40
years in 2003, but the state managed to arrive at a balanced budget. To
help it overcome massive budget deficits in 2003, the state cut funding
for higher education by more than 25% over the previous two years. Nearly
all state universities raised tuition in response. Despite this fact, the
State Council of Higher Education said Virginia needed to come up with an
additional $350 million per year to maintain the quality of its public
higher education system.